Professional Development and Web 2.0

from Technology & Learning Professional development in most schools has a predictable look and feel: summer workshops, brown-bag luncheon trainings, and the infamous in-service day. These events can be successful, and there is no doubt they have helped numerous educators become better at what they do. But Web 2.0

Professional development in most schools has a predictable look and feel: summer workshops, brown-bag luncheon trainings, and the infamous in-service day. These events can be successful, and there is no doubt they have helped numerous educators become better at what they do. But Web 2.0 opens up a new world of professional learning.

The new tools and processes of Web 2.0, such as blogs, social bookmarking sites, podcasting and RSS, enable individual, continual, and highly customized experiences through the creation of a personal learning environment. The PLE is responsible for connecting individuals to form a community of learners, where all contribute and collaborate in what amounts to a global discussion of ideas. This discussion can and does have profound application to personal professional learning, and is driven by all those who participate. As Will Richardson, "learner in chief" at Connective Learning, says, "We are at times teachers and at times learners. Our roles shift with each interaction."

Tools that Drive Personal Learning Environments.

Blogs

Blogs have given everyone the opportunity to have a voice, and people have taken advantage. As of April 2006, Technorati.com tracked more than 34.5 million blogs, with 1.2 million posts being added to the blogosphere daily (an average of 50,000 per hour!) as well as 75,000 new blogs daily. In fact, the blogosphere is doubling in size every six months. Basically, blogs permit an individual to contribute his or her thoughts to the global discourse and to deliver those thoughts via RSS syndication. Topics range from School 2.0 to the "flat world" to reform strategies, and to the No Child Left Behind Act. Robust discussions in blog posts—with invitations to readers to support or reject ideas—have the power to challenge long-held perceptions and beliefs. Via this process, real learning happens.

Del.icio.us

Del.icio.us is a social bookmarking service that enables users to store and tag information resources in an online account that can be accessed by others. Del.icio.us has several social networking features. They include the production of RSS feeds, a "Your Network" feature that enables you to identify a set of del.icio.us users and see what they bookmark, a subscription option that enables a user to subscribe to a specific tag in del.icio.us, such as digitalstorytelling, and see all the resources from all the del.icio.us users on that topic, and a "Links for You" section, where other del.icio.us users can send you links to resources.

Podcasts

Podcasts are recordings of an individual, of a discussion, or perhaps of a presentation, delivered in MP3 format. Like blogs, they provide a voice, but this time in audio format that can be listened to on an MP3 player or a computer while exercising, walking the dog, or driving the car. Like blogs and del.icio.us resources, podcasts can be delivered through an RSS feed to the listener or learner.

RSS and Aggregators

The key is RSS (Really Simple Syndication). The three tools above all produce RSS feeds which stream or deliver content. The aggregator is like a mailbox and captures the information feeds and presents it to the user. The aggregator's value is that it presents feeds from multiple authors and content types (blogs, wikis, podcasts, Flickr, and del.icio.us) all in a single location for ease of processing.

A report recently released by the Center on Education Policy (see News & Trends) reveals that the four-year-old No Child Left Behind Act has indeed served to shine a light on the importance of professional development for K-12 educators. Beyond that basic fact, though, any real broad-based impact on the training

from Technology & Learning Aggregator: presents feeds from multiple authors and content types (blogs, wikis, podcasts, Flickr, and del.icio.us) all in a single location for ease of processing. Blog: Web log or chronological online personal journal with reflections, comments and often links to other Web

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